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Thinking, Language, and Intelligence

Thinking, Language, and Intelligence. Thought. Cognition—mental activities involved in acquiring, retaining, and using knowledge Thinking—manipulation of mental representations to draw inferences and conclusions Mental image—representation of objects or events that are not present. Concepts.

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Thinking, Language, and Intelligence

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  1. Thinking, Language, and Intelligence

  2. Thought • Cognition—mental activities involved in acquiring, retaining, and using knowledge • Thinking—manipulation of mental representations to draw inferences and conclusions • Mental image—representation of objects or events that are not present

  3. Concepts • Concept—mental category of objects or ideas based on shared properties • Formal concept—mental category formed by learning rules • Natural concept—mental category formed by everyday experience

  4. Examples of Concepts • Formal concept—follows rigid rules, not usually intuitive (A polygon is…) • Natural concept—results from everyday experience (Name some mammals…)

  5. Insight and Intuition • Insight—sudden realization of how a problem can be solved • Intuition—coming to a conclusion without conscious awareness of thought processes involved

  6. Decision Making • Single feature model—make a decision by focusing on only one feature • Additive model—systematically evaluate the important features of each alternative. • Elimination-by-aspects—rate choices based on features. Eliminate those that do not meet the desired criteria, despite other desirable characteristics.

  7. Language and Thinking • Language is a system for combining arbitrary symbols to produce an infinite number of meaningful statements • Linguistic relativity hypothesis is the notion that difference among languages cause difference in the thoughts of their speakers

  8. Intelligence Global capacity to think rationally, act purposefully, and deal effectively with the environment

  9. Measuring Intelligence • Alfred Binet • Mental age • Chronological age • IQ—comparison of people in similar age groups

  10. Alfred Binet (1857–1911) • Intelligence—collection of higher-order mental abilities loosely related to one another • Did not rank “normal” students according to the scores • Intelligence is nurtured • Binet-Simon Test developed in France, 1905

  11. Modern Intelligence Tests The Stanford-Binet Scale • modification of the original Binet-Simon, after original came to US • intelligence quotient (IQ)—child’s mental age divided by child’s chronological age • used widely in the US, not as much as previously

  12. Modern Intelligence Tests • The Wechsler tests • used more widely now than Stanford-Binet • modeled after Binet’s, also made adult test • WISC-III for children • WAIS-III for adults

  13. Qualities of Good Tests • Standardized—administered to large groups of people under uniform conditions to establish norms • Reliable—ability to produce consistent results when administered on repeated occasions under similar conditions • Valid—ability to measure what the test is intended to measure

  14. How valid are IQ tests? • Validity—test measures what it’s intended to measure • Does test correlate with other measures of same construct? • School achievement • IQ tests (i.e., S-B and the Wechsler) correlate highly • but they were designed to test stuff that you learn in school • Prestigious positions • On-the-job performance & other work-related variables

  15. What do IQ tests measure about your mind? • Mental speed and span of working memory • typically use a digit span test to measure this • more recent studies find significant correlations between reaction times and IQ scores • Why is this important? • mental quickness may expand capacity of working memory

  16. Theories of Intelligence • Charles Spearman—“g” factor • Louis Thurstone—intelligence as a person’s “pattern” of mental abilities • Howard Gardner—multiple intelligences • Sternberg–triarchic theory

  17. Howard Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences

  18. Robert Sternberg • Analytic intelligence—mental processes used in learning how to solve problems • Creative intelligence—ability to deal with novel situations by drawing on existing skills and knowledge • Practical intelligence—ability to adapt to the environment (street smarts)

  19. Nature vs. Nurture in IQ • Are differences between people due to environmental or genetic differences? • Misunderstanding the question • “Is a person’s intelligence due more to genes or to environment?” • both genes & intelligence crucial for any trait

  20. Heredity and Environment • Heritability • degree to which variation in trait stems from genetic, rather than environmental, differences among individuals • Environment • degree to which variation is due to environmental rather than genetic differences

  21. Racial Difference in IQ • Racial difference in average IQ among different racial groups can be measured • More variation in IQ scores within a particular group than between groups

  22. Other Influences on IQ Scores • Cross cultural studies show that average IQ of groups subject to social discrimination are often lower than socially dominant group even if there is no racial difference • Tests reflect the culture in which they are developed; cultural factors also influence test taking behavior (culture bias)

  23. Creativity To enhance your creativity • Creativity as a goal • Reinforce creative behavior • Engage in problem finding • Acquire relevant knowledge • Try different approaches • Exert effort and expect setbacks

  24. What is Your Emotional Intelligence? Emotional Genius 200 Highly Empathic 150 Average 100 Emotionally Challenged 50

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